A healthier frankfurter that still tastes good? Hot-dog!

Replacing saturated fats with runny oils has yet to producer a worthy wiener. Health nuts rejoice: food scientists have found that unsaturated fats paired with cellulose can give hot dogs a satisfying texture with less artery-clogging risks.

What's the most satisfying part of a hot dog? Maybe it's that magical combination of texture and flavor -- uniformly supple meat with a salty greasy taste. But that flavor and texture come at a cost to your health.

beef + saturated fat = yummy but unhealthy hot dog

beef + oil = healthier but leathery hot dog

Saturated fat consumption raises your risk for cardiovascular disease and high cholesterol. For this reason oils (unsaturated fats) can offer a healthier alternative. Unfortunately, replacing hard saturated fats with runny oils in frankfurters has yet to producer a worthy wiener.

Ethyl cellulose molecules add a scaffolding to the oil, giving it a firmer structure. Test subjects rated the cellulose hot dogs as equal in chewiness and hardness to traditional hot dogs.

The new hot dogs aren't diet foods by any measure, they still contain as much net fat as old-fashioned frankfurters. What they do offer is a less artery-clogging way to get your full hot dog satisfaction. The research team hopes to replicate this technology in other saturated fat-dependent foods.